by Tatra Man » Sun Sep 10, 2006 7:31 pm
Hello,
That's my old Tatra you saw at the Minneapolis Institute of Art. Glad it's being enjoyed.
As far as your question about Tatra's influence on the Tucker, there are no "smoking guns" showing that the Tucker Corp. copied the Tatra. However, the Tatra was the most innovative automobile in the world during the 1930s. EVERYONE in the automobile industry worldwide knew about the streamline Tatras , as they were promoted in every trade magazine around the world. However, Tatras were not imported to the United States and the average American citizen would not have heard of them. Thus, Preston Tucker had little difficulty wowing the American public with a rear-engine sedan.
European designers created numerous streamline rear-engine automobiles throughout the 1930s. Between 1934 and 1938, Tatra was the only company to put rear-engine streamliners into serial production. After the Tatra T77 debuted in 1934, American automobile companies, including Ford, created prototype rear engine automobiles, but never produced them.
According to George S. Lawson's (who designed the Tucker Torpedo for Preston Tucker), when he and Tucker first met in 1944, Tucker requested that Lawson design him a rear-engine, streamline, 6-passenger sedan. Interestingly, Lawson was a huge rear-engine advocate in the 1930s, well before meeting Tucker. I believe this is the real reason Lawson was recommended to Tucker for the job.
While researching Tucker history, I have discovered that George S. Lawson was designing rear-engine streamline sedans with features such as cycle fenders, three headlights, and a central driving position, while working for Buick as early as 1937. Lawson later updated these 1930s Buick/GM designs during his 1944-6 tenure working for Preston Tucker, and these updated designs became the Tucker Torpedo. The lineage is unmistakable. Thus, the genesis of the Tucker '48 is derived directly from a 1930s design!
It is also interesting to note that there is a 1947 article in an American magazine that discusses the exotic streamline Tatra T87 (which, humorously, initially debuted eleven years earlier in 1936). Without mentioning names, the writer states that a few large American automobile companies purchased streamline Tatras "a while back" in order to study them. Unfortunately, I have been unable to ascertain what companies these were or when this happened. But judging from the interest in rear engine automobiles in the US during the mid-1930s by some big name American firms, there are numerous possibilities.